The New York Times reported yesterday climate cultists are seeking new methods to impose their anti-capitalist views on the American economy.
Their latest approach involves pressuring local organizations, state agencies, and commissions to alter rules and laws, aiming to create change at the local level where conservationists might not anticipate it.
This time, the resistance will be at the local level, climate activist Jamie Henn told the Gray Lady. We can’t make it to 2030 without strong climate leadership back in D.C.
The New York Times also points out:
But the climate movement also plans to spend the next four years hunkering down at the local level. McKibben’s newest organization, Third Act, a nonprofit group for climate activists older than 60 that he started about three years ago, is highlighting the push for change at the community and state level. Over the past 18 months, they’ve begun a new strategy: attending the meetings of obscure state agencies or commissions that hold a lot of power over the energy transition.
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The effort will focus on community and regional-scale clean energy projects, and laying the groundwork for a big push to bring climate issues into the 2028 presidential campaign.
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While some parts of the movement are refining their economic arguments, other climate leaders hope to center their message on people that have been disproportionately affected by environmental harms or climate disasters. As I reported today, the youth climate movement has largely reframed itself as the youth climate justice movement.
According to Pew Research, climate change was ranked as the least important issue in the 2024 cycle. But climate cultists are undeterred since their real goal is to ruin or outright destroy people’s lives in order to eventually control them.